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SECURITY
Security
software market to hit US$4b in APAC
ConvergenceAsia staff
19/09/2011
The Asia-Pacific security
software market will reach revenues of US$4 billion in 2015, a compound
annual growth rate of 10 per cent from the $2.49 billion it hit in 2010,
predicts Ovum.
The independent technology analyst finds that the strong growth will be
driven by the increasing threat to enterprises from organised gangs and the
changing business technology landscape.
Ovum principal analyst Graham Titterington commented: “The global security
software market will see strong growth during the next few years, with
revenues increasing from $16.76 billion at the end of 2010 to $23.3 billion
at the end of 2015. Asia-Pacific will experience stronger growth because of
the pace of technological advance in the region and the growing level of
security awareness.”
“One of the key drivers for this is the increasing threat to enterprises
from well-organised gangs from rival organisations, which want to steal
valuable data for their own gains. These organisations, which include
governments, have the resources to ramp up the threat level and launch
advanced and persistent attacks, which are difficult to defeat. The
competitive market in the region makes this threat a particular concern.”
“However, changes in business technology and operations are also creating
new security demands. The major changes that will drive the growth of the
market during the next few years are cloud computing, increased mobility and
business use of social networking. The security issues these phenomena raise
can be significant, and they need to be tackled accordingly.”
According to Titterington, emerging trends such as greater interoperability
of systems between organisations, the use of shared user authentication
systems (particularly for enterprise customers and employees of partner
organisations) and increasing use of virtualisation technology will also
have an impact on take-up of security software.
He believes much of the investment from enterprises will be in encryption
software, along with advanced encryption key management environments, as
these play a key role in the fight to protect sensitive and valuable data
from hackers. Other key investment targets will be new types of anti-malware
protection to counter the huge threat the Internet poses.
Titterington continued: “Enterprises are becoming more aware of the threat
posed to them by hackers due to the increasing number of high-profile
attacks on companies such as Sony. These cases are highlighting the
potential damage that businesses face if sensitive and valuable data is
stolen.”
Ovum has also released a new security vendor rankings and market share
analysis, which shows that Symantec is the world number one, followed by
McAfee and then Trend Micro.
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